he says in 2006, after the election, when i was the chairman-elect, he talked to me about reforming fannie and freddie and i agreed with him. in fact, one of the first things we did when i became chairman was to pass a bill to regulate fannie and freddie in the house. there was a group called fm policy focus, the major opponent of them, and they said, frank sad down with paulson and they frankly upset people in the senate and republicans in the house but they come up with a bill that was excellent and it was a bill that became law. by 2004 i was willing to change it -- yeah. one last point. in 2005, the republicans controlling the congress, i think, passed a bill in the house, where i served, to restrict fannie and freddie some. the administration didn't think it went far enough and it died in the senate. >> thank you for taking us back and going through all those years and thank you for bringing in the books, the articles, the props today. at the end of the day, here's the question, congressman. we see the grilling jpmorgan and jamie dimon are getting in the public media and, you know, a